
Thanks guys. I've been thinking (a lot) about all this, and what happened this last time he yelped going out and was lame coming back in. There's no doubt he was in a lot of discomfort that evening, having seen the vet and been given some pain meds that day, and then seeing the Emergency vet that evening he was given 'pre-surgery medication' to help him through the night. The next morning, when he was moving SO badly when back at the vet's office, that shocked the vet who saw him the day before, as much as me because he wasn't moving like that initially. So was his uncoordinated movement the next morning because he was still under the influence of what was given by the Emergency vet the evening before!!!? There's no doubting what was seen on his x-rays however.
I think I will have to have a chat with his vet in a few weeks time unless I see something I don't like with him - I have to take my Whippet in to have her corn hulled again, so then might be a good time to get into it, as suggesed, not to second guess his treatment, but to voice my concerns about Metacam and NSAID's in general.
Thanks for the feedback.
@ Brainless - that's very reassuring because Frankie has only just turned 7, not that we know how long he has before what's already happened, gets worse. He has hip sockets, but subluxation which means the top of the bone (femur) isn't properly in the socket. Hard to describe, but there's a clear gap between the femur and the socket. I'm determined that his muscle tone doesn't deteriorate as clearly it's helping support his back end and any lameness hadn't previously presented in his rear (until the morning he was admitted for x-ray), but his front. He has no problem getting up after a rest.